Linards Tauns (born Arnolds Mikus BÃÂrzs-BÃÂrzià Âà ¡) (October 13, 1922 – July 30, 1963) was a Latvian writer. He was one of the immigrant artists who formed the Hell's Kitchen school of art among Latvian immigrants in New York City.
Linards Tauns was born on October 13, 1922, in Riga, Latvia as Arnolds Mikus BÃÂrzs-BÃÂrzià Âà ¡. He spent his childhood in Annià Âmuià ¾a neighbourhood in Riga. In 1944 he emigrated to Germany. In 1946 he published his first works in Latvian immigrant periodicals. In 1950 he emigrated to USA and settled in New York City. He worked in the typography and also as an editor in Latvian magazine Latvieà ¡u à ½urnÃÂls.
In 1950s he together with GunÃÂrs Salià Âà ¡ established so called Hell's Kitchen group of young Latvian immigrant modernist poets. Group was based in the Linards Tauns flat in Hell's Kitchen neighbourhood. It was a place for regular meetings, discussions and poetry. Only one collection of Linards Tauns poetry was published during his lifetime. It was Mà «à ¾Ã«gais MÃÂkonis (Eternal Cloud) in 1958. His second collection Laulëbas ar pilsÃÂtu (Marriage with the city) was published posthumously in 1964 and was edited by his friend GunÃÂrs Salià Âà ¡.
Linards Tauns died on July 30, 1963, in the New York.
Edition of his Collected Poems in Latvian "Dzeja" was published in 2011.